BDR Urges BSF to Stop Killing
Friday, 24 September 2010
Author / Source : STAFF REPORTER
Bangladesh has urged the Indian border security forces to use alternative to firearms to avoid deaths of ‘innocent Bangladeshis’ in the border areas. Home minister Shahara Khatun made the call at a meeting with the chief of BSF Raman Shrivastava at her office at the Secretariat yesterday, home secretary Abdus Sobhan Sikder told reporters after the meeting in the afternoon.
The BSF chief in reply assured the minister of stopping shooting along the border.
“We are considering whether something else can be used instead of bullets,” the home secretary said quoting the Indian BSF chief as saying.
The BSF authorities were also requested to ensure that any member of the Khashia or other community or other Indian nationals do not move along the border with arms while the BSF also urged Bangladesh that no one should move along the border at night.
The meeting was also attended, among others, by state minister for home Shamsul Haque Tuku, home secretary Abdus Sobhan Sikder, director general of Bangladesh Rifles Major General Rafiqul Islam and Indian High Commissioner to Dhaka Rajit Mittar.
Meanwhile, the director general-level border conference between Bangladesh Rifles and Indian Border Security Force formally began yesterday at the BDR headquarters at Peelkhana in the capital with an aim to resolving a wide range of issues to maintain a secure and peaceful common frontier that stretches over 4,500 kilometres. The six-day conference started focussing on different issues including preventing trans-border smuggling and improving law and order in the border areas.
BSF DG Raman Srivastava is leading a 20-member delegation while BDR chief Md Rafiqul Islam a 22-member team in the conference. At the conference, Dhaka will raise the issue of killing, wounding, and torturing of unarmed Bangladeshi nationals by BSF and Indian civilians at the border, BDR sources said.
Issues of adversely possessed land, illegal construction of structures, abduction of Bangladeshi people by BSF men will also come up for discussion.
Friday, 24 September 2010
Author / Source : STAFF REPORTER
Bangladesh has urged the Indian border security forces to use alternative to firearms to avoid deaths of ‘innocent Bangladeshis’ in the border areas. Home minister Shahara Khatun made the call at a meeting with the chief of BSF Raman Shrivastava at her office at the Secretariat yesterday, home secretary Abdus Sobhan Sikder told reporters after the meeting in the afternoon.
The BSF chief in reply assured the minister of stopping shooting along the border.
“We are considering whether something else can be used instead of bullets,” the home secretary said quoting the Indian BSF chief as saying.
The BSF authorities were also requested to ensure that any member of the Khashia or other community or other Indian nationals do not move along the border with arms while the BSF also urged Bangladesh that no one should move along the border at night.
The meeting was also attended, among others, by state minister for home Shamsul Haque Tuku, home secretary Abdus Sobhan Sikder, director general of Bangladesh Rifles Major General Rafiqul Islam and Indian High Commissioner to Dhaka Rajit Mittar.
Meanwhile, the director general-level border conference between Bangladesh Rifles and Indian Border Security Force formally began yesterday at the BDR headquarters at Peelkhana in the capital with an aim to resolving a wide range of issues to maintain a secure and peaceful common frontier that stretches over 4,500 kilometres. The six-day conference started focussing on different issues including preventing trans-border smuggling and improving law and order in the border areas.
BSF DG Raman Srivastava is leading a 20-member delegation while BDR chief Md Rafiqul Islam a 22-member team in the conference. At the conference, Dhaka will raise the issue of killing, wounding, and torturing of unarmed Bangladeshi nationals by BSF and Indian civilians at the border, BDR sources said.
Issues of adversely possessed land, illegal construction of structures, abduction of Bangladeshi people by BSF men will also come up for discussion.